Colonel Edward Harris Greathed (Later General Sir Edward Greathed, K.C.B.)
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8th Foot
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Edward Harris Greathed, the elder son of E. H. Greathed of
Uddens, near Wimborne, Dorset, was born at South Audley
Street, London, on 8 June 1812. He was educated at Westminster
School and was commissioned Ensign by purchase in the H.M’s 8th
Regiment of Foot on 22 June 1832. Promoted Lieutenant by
purchase in May 1833, he sailed with the regiment to the West
Indies in November of that year and served there until February
1836. Having bought his Captaincy in April 1838, he served one
year in Canada, and first arrived in India in 1846, having
recently acquired his Majority, also by purchase. On the
outbreak of the Mutiny he had held the rank of Lieutenant-
Colonel for nearly three years.
Greathed arrived on Delhi Ridge in command of the 8th Foot on
30 June, and was present at the repulse of the enemy sorties of
9, 14 and 18 July. He commanded the 3rd Infantry Brigade in the
repulse of the enemy attack of 23 July, and was selected by
Archdale Wilson to command the column sent to occupy the
Khoodsia Bagh and Ludlow Castle on 7 September, when the siege
batteries were moved forward to commence breaching the city
walls at a range of 180 yards. At the assault of the city on 14
September, the 8th Foot formed part of No. 2 Column under
Brigadier William Jones (qv) of the 61st Foot, and took part in
the storming of the breach near the Water Bastion.

Inside the city Greathed met Lieutenant Noel Money of the
Bengal Europeans, who remembered: ‘Colonel Greathed of the 8th
Queen’s was now in the battery and seeing that I had lost my
sword which had been stolen by a Sikh while I was laying the gun,
he took a sword that had belonged to an officer of his regiment
who had been killed just before, and gave it to me, saying, “Here,
Money, this is one of our swords. If you use it as I saw you using
your own a little while ago you will not disgrace it.”’
Greathed served in the city for the next five days, and he was
selected by Archdale Wilson to command the 2,500-strong
moveable column which left Delhi on the 24th to pursue mutineers
fleeing into Oudh.
Having evacuated the column’s wounded to Meerut after the
action at Boolundshuhur, Greathed resumed his march on 3
October, hoping to effect a junction with Sir Henry Havelock’s
column and assist in the relief of the beleaguered garrison at
Lucknow.

The carnival atmosphere was short lived. Quite unexpectedly a
band of rebels disguised as jugglers turned on their audience of
9th Lancers, while elsewhere on the parade-ground the quarter
guard of the same regiment was attacked by rebel Sowars
wearing uniform similar to the 2nd Punjab Cavalry.
Two troops of rebel cavalry thundered out of the high crops
which bordered the parade-ground and heavy guns opened fire
on the camp. ‘Although taken so completely by surprise, the
British troops reacted with a promptness and energy that one
observer described as ‘simply astonishing’. An officer galloped
off to the fort to fetch Greathed who had gone there for
breakfast; the infantry rushed to seize their arms; the cavalry
to saddle their horses.
The Bengal Artillery, though in quarters ‘never the most
amiable or the best disciplined’ of troops, demonstrated once
more that on service they were certainly inferior to none’. The
round shot were coming in pretty fast,’ Captain Barter wrote,
‘and it was really beautiful to see the artillery prepare for
service. Their guns were all in park and the horses unharnessed
and yet it was perfectly marvellous the rapidity with which
they got into action, the enemy shot all the time rattling
amongst the guns and limbers.’
‘Within minutes the British force was ready to repel the attack, many of the 75th in their shirt-sleeves, some of the 9th
Lancers still in their stockinged feet. The troops in the fort marched out to support them, wearing bright new uniforms’, fifes
playing, drums beating, bayonets gleaming in the sunlight, making the walls ‘re-echo with the tramp of footsteps as they fell to
the time of the music’. But their help was not needed. By the time they reached the parade-ground the rebels had broken and
fled, losing all their guns and ammunition, chased away through the crops of bajra whose tall shattered stalks indicated the path
of their flight’.
The column rested near Agra for four days before continuing towards Lucknow. Brigadier Hope Grant at Delhi, meanwhile, had
received a note from the Secretary to the Government of the North Western Provinces at Agra informing him: ‘You are to come
on as sharp as you can; You are to come at once, by the mail if possible and take command.’
Greathed subsequently commanded the 3rd Infantry Brigade of the army under Sir Colin Campbell from 10 November to 9
January 1858, taking part in the relief of Sir James Outram’s force at Dilkusha, and the defeat of Tantia Tope at Cawnpore
on 6 December 1857.
Greathed was created a Companion of the Bath on 1 January 1858 and was promoted Colonel on the 19th. Advanced to Knight
Commander of the Bath in 1865, Sir Edward Greathed returned to England in 1859, and was placed on Half-Pay until 1872,
when he was appointed to the command of the Eastern District for five years. In 1880 he was made Colonel of the H.M’s 108th
(Madras) Regiment of Foot and promoted General.
Greathed died at his oddly named family home, Uddens, on 19 November 1881.
On the 8th, however, Greathed decided to go to Bryjgarh in order to move closer to Agra, from which place he had been
receiving a stream of urgent letters in ‘every language, living and dead ... beseeching, commanding him to hasten at the utmost
speed’ to protect the European families, who, fearing attack by a large force of rebels concentrating at Muttra, had
incarcerated themselves in the fort. Aware that the detour would prevent him from linking up with Havelock, Greathed felt
unable to ignore the pleas and he marched at midnight on the 8th, proceeded by his cavalry and horse artillery. But after
thirty-six hours word was received that the enemy no longer threatened Agra, and had withdrawn over the Kalle Nuddee, a
stream about ten miles away. Accordingly, the leading units halted and waited for the infantry to catch up.
‘When Greathed arrived in Agra the panic had subsided. Most of the mutineers who had arrived at Muttra from Delhi had
dispersed to their homes. The others, whose reported approach upon Agra had been responsible for the flood of letters
handed to Greathed during his march up the Grand Trunk Road, were now said to have retired nine miles. The column was ‘not
really needed’, after all. Thus it was that the ladies, looking down upon it from the walls of the fort, watched it pass with
expressions of disgust at its dirtiness rather than gratitude for its prompt arrival. Greathed took his men to the parade-
ground south of the fort where some went immediately to sleep while others had their breakfast, bargained with native
vendors of drinks and sweetmeats, or talked to the soldiers of the garrison who had strolled down from the fort. Most of the
civilians in the fort wandered down to the parade-ground; so had thousands of inhabitants of the city who had come out ‘to
watch the camp being pitched, and to see what was going on’. ‘It seemed like a fair more than anything else’.
